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Home Sweet Garbage Sector

Author: Vezella
last update publish date: 2026-05-02 02:23:11

The old man did not argue, mostly because he had no idea what to argue with. He still could not understand why this girl was here, why she was smiling, or why a pregnant woman who had just been sentenced to exile spoke about poisoned land like someone had handed her a gift wrapped in a bow. His grandson stood beside him with the jug held tightly in both hands, looking between Vera, the dead bodies behind them, and the dark stretch of land ahead like he was trying to decide if she was a blessing, a monster, or both.

Then the old man paused because his head felt clear.

That alone nearly shook him more than the dead attackers. He knew his mental level had been collapsing. He had felt the red madness crawling behind his eyes, scratching at his thoughts, pushing him closer to the point where he would forget faces, names, words, and eventually even the child standing beside him. But the water she gave him had pulled that pressure back. Not fully, not forever maybe, but enough for him to think. Enough for him to understand the boy’s hand in his. Enough for him to remember his wife, sick in their shelter, waiting on water they did not have.

His gaze dropped to the jug, still half full, and he held it out to Vera.

“Keep it,” Vera said before he could speak. “I have water. Do not worry about me. Your wife needs it more than I do.”

The old man’s face changed. His confusion sharpened into something almost frightened. “How do you know?”

The boy looked up at him, then at Vera, clutching the jug even tighter. He had not said much since the fight, but his eyes were full of questions. How did she know about Grandma? How did she have water? Why was she covered in blood and talking about farms? Why did she look so happy?

“Everyone has their own secrets, old man,” Vera said, her smile turning sharper, though not unkind. “But trust me, I do not have bad thoughts about you. Keep the water and come back when it is finished. I will need help and workers, so do not worry about me. Now let us rush. I need to settle before it gets dark. I need to rest, and the babies keep kicking. They want to sleep too.”

The old man stared at her belly, then at the jug, then back at her face. Nothing about her made sense. She was too calm. 

The boy leaned closer to him, whispering without taking his eyes off Vera, “Grandpa, is she really going to live there?”

“But there are no houses there,” the old man said, still watching her with a mix of gratitude, suspicion, and real concern now. “Do you want to stay with us?”

Vera shook her head right away. His village was big, and where there were many people, there was drama and at least one idiot who would try to test her before morning. The old man would clean his own territory himself later, especially now that his mind was clear enough to understand what was happening around him. 

For now, Vera needed land. She needed a place where she could pull her house out of her space, plant something, claim the ground, and start building before anyone else decided to show up and waste her time.

They continued walking. The boy glanced at her every few steps like he wanted to ask a hundred questions but did not dare. Vera followed the old man’s directions until the piles of broken metal thinned and the ground changed. The smell changed too. Less rust. Less burned plastic. More damp rot, old leaves, wet soil, and the heavy sweetness of things breaking down into something useful. Then she saw it.

The patch of dark soil. Vera stopped for half a second, then rushed toward it so fast the old man and the boy both froze.

To anyone else, it probably looked disgusting. The land sat near a massive garbage pile of rotten organic waste, with old food matter, broken containers, dead plant material, and dark liquid stains half-sunk into the ground. The old man opened his mouth, probably to warn her again, but Vera was already crouching near the soil with both hands hovering over it like she had found buried treasure.

“Oh, this is beautiful,” she breathed.

The boy blinked. “Beautiful?”

The old man looked at the dark patch, then at Vera, then back at the dirt. He had lived in the garbage sector long enough to know the difference between useful and useless trash, but he had never looked at that patch and seen anything worth smiling over. Vera looked like she had just won the lottery.

“This is perfect,” she said, almost laughing. “Do you see this? Of course you do not. Never mind. This is perfect.”

The air should have smelled like spoiled eggs, decay, and sickness, but to Vera it smelled like rich soil after rain. The organic waste created a natural heat pocket, which meant the ground would stay warmer at night. The clouds that gathered over the piles would condense and water the land without her carrying bucket after bucket like an idiot. Back on Earth, people would have killed for a patch like this. 

The old man watched her scoop up a handful of soil and rub it between her fingers.

“Miss Vera,” he said carefully, like he was speaking to someone standing too close to a cliff, “that soil is not safe.”

Vera looked up at him with bright eyes. “That is what makes it even better.”

The old man did not look convinced, but he also did not argue. After what he had just seen, maybe this strange pregnant woman did know something they did not. 

Vera said goodbye to the old man and the boy, promised they could come back for more water, and waited until they were far enough not to see what happened next. Vera waved once, bright and shameless, then stepped into her space the second they disappeared behind a wall of scrap.

The tiny mobile home she had stored before was no longer tiny. It had transformed into a huge house. Vera stood there with her mouth open. The old cramped structure she remembered was gone, replaced by something wider, stronger, and much cleaner, with reinforced walls, bigger windows, real insulation, and a proper porch. The inside had changed too. The bed was larger. The kitchen was stocked better. The storage shelves had expanded. Even the old blankets looked newer, softer, and warmer.

Vera got so excited she started jumping on both legs, then stopped halfway through because of the babies and laughed under her breath.

“Babies, look,” she said, turning as the three bulbs floated around her, brighter and bigger inside the space now. “We are rich. I mean, not officially, but emotionally? We are absolutely rich. Forget that tiny room in the slums. Look at this bed. Look at this kitchen. Look at this whole house.”

The children pulsed with excitement, circling around the room like little stars exploring their first home. Vera did not waste time. She picked two dry potatoes she had saved, grabbed the house, and returned outside to place it on the flat section near the dark soil. The house settled into the land like it belonged there. The ground tightened under it, steady and firm, almost as if the garbage planet itself was making room.

Vera stared at the house, then at the soil, then at the sky, and grinned again.

She found a small patch of black soil, cut the potatoes into pieces, and planted them carefully. It was not much, but it was the start. In her old world, the start was always the hardest part. Here, the land felt hungry to grow.

When she finished, the sky had already darkened, and her body finally remembered it had been through court, exile, a battle, blood, walking, planting, and far too much excitement for one pregnant woman. Vera went back inside the house, washed the blood from her face and arms, cleaned her hands until the water ran clear, and looked at herself in the mirror for only a few seconds. She went to bed to finally rest and sleep. The last time she had slept in a bed this comfortable was before the apocalypse started, before survival turned every night into a calculation and every soft surface into a luxury she could not trust. 

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  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   Home Sweet Garbage Sector

    The old man did not argue, mostly because he had no idea what to argue with. He still could not understand why this girl was here, why she was smiling, or why a pregnant woman who had just been sentenced to exile spoke about poisoned land like someone had handed her a gift wrapped in a bow. His grandson stood beside him with the jug held tightly in both hands, looking between Vera, the dead bodies behind them, and the dark stretch of land ahead like he was trying to decide if she was a blessing, a monster, or both.Then the old man paused because his head felt clear.That alone nearly shook him more than the dead attackers. He knew his mental level had been collapsing. He had felt the red madness crawling behind his eyes, scratching at his thoughts, pushing him closer to the point where he would forget faces, names, words, and eventually even the child standing beside him. But the water she gave him had pulled that pressure back. Not fully, not forever maybe, but enough for him to thi

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   Poisoned Soil Sounds Perfect

    She looked up at the last attacker and smiled.On any normal day, Vera should not have looked dangerous at all. She was barely five feet tall, dressed in a white dress that had no business being on a garbage planet, with skinny arms, thin legs, and a belly heavy with three babies. But now the white dress was soaked and splattered with blood, her hair stuck to her face, her machete hung loose in one hand, and the ground around her was covered with bodies that had been alive less than a minute ago. She looked too small for the damage she had caused, and that made the sight worse. She did not look like a woman who had survived an attack. She looked like a demon who had been interrupted during dinner and was deciding whether the last person standing was worth the effort.“Do you want to test me?” Vera asked, her smile widening just enough to show him she would not mind if he made the wrong choice.“No,” the bandit said, staggering back.His red eyes flickered with the first clear spark o

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   Just Watch What Mommy Can Do

    Mutated humans were not that clean. Their powers came apart inside their bodies and rebuilt them wrong. Some grew bone plates through their skin, some leaked acid from their mouths, some could jump from walls with twisted legs, some screamed loud enough to burst eardrums, and some still remembered just enough words to beg right before their hands tried to rip your throat out. Vera had learned early that pity got you killed with those things. You did not talk. You did not wait. You cut tendons first if they were fast, broke the jaw if they could scream, took the eyes if they had ranged powers, and then finished the neck before the body figured out how to keep moving. If the head stayed attached too long, they adapted. If the spine was not broken, they crawled. If one hand remained free, they grabbed. So Vera had learned to be clean, fast, and mean enough to live.So at the end of the day, there was only one outcome here. Death. They did not have compassion left, and Vera was going to

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   Better Than Expected

    “Ahh, this is amazing,” Vera said, stretching her arms above her head while the guard stared at her like she had lost her mind. “My paradise.”She started walking, and the farther she moved from the border line, the better she felt. Of course, no one in the galaxy with a working survival instinct would willingly step on this planet. Even the people who sent mentally collapsed citizens, beasts, criminals, and unwanted bloodlines here would never place their own polished boots on this ground. But if they did, if they stopped wrinkling their noses at the garbage long enough to feel the pulse under the dirt, they would understand this land was not dead at all. This sector healed. The air here was preserved, the soil was rich under all the waste, and with time, it could become much better than anything the galaxy imagined. Vera smiled again, though calling it a smile was not fully fair. She was grinning from ear to ear. Who would not? This place might have been called a garbage sector,

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   Welcome to Trash Paradise

    The lights pressed closer. Vera held them for a long moment and let herself be gentle because here, no one could see it and mistake it for weakness. The apocalypse on Earth had made her cold because being kind got people killed. Trust did the same. She had watched good people die first, generous people get robbed, forgiving people get betrayed, and hopeful people get eaten because they believed someone would come back for them. The same thing happened in the book. The original Vera had been too loving, too forgiving, too desperate to be chosen. At the end, her children died, she died too, and the fathers did not get a happy ending either. Nobody won. Everyone just paid for being stupid too late.Unfortunately, the book had never truly cared about Vera. It had focused on another character and his brides. The dark lord loved three women who ended up married to the prince, the general, and the lord. Then the dark lord slaughtered everyone because his precious females were mistreated, an

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   Three Tiny Lights and One Big Plan

    Vera sat inside the space car and finally let her shoulders drop. The guard had brought her water and a small snack, and for a moment, neither of them spoke. To him, this whole situation was ridiculous. He and his wife had spent every saving they had just to nurture one child from a tube, and those three men, who controlled most of the wealth and power in the galaxy, had managed to create three children without spending a single coin, without praying over a glass chamber, without selling pieces of their lives to afford a chance. He felt bad for the woman in front of him, but he could not understand why she was smiling after being sentenced to exile in the garbage sector.Vera did not explain herself. She leaned back against the seat, closed her eyes, and slipped into the space inside her mind. In her former life, she had collected everything she could get her hands on. Food, seeds, medicine, weapons, tools, books, water filters, old machines, spare parts, blankets, and anything else t

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   Congratulations, You Lost

    The judge stared at her for half a second longer than necessary before sending his secretary to finalize the paperwork. He already felt beaten down by the situation. He could have given her a less harsh sentence if she had fought him. He could have delayed the case, ordered proper defense, demanded

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   Three Years in Trash Paradise

    “Your Honor, I do not have all day,” Vera said, her voice cutting through the courtroom before the lawyers could start another round of barking at each other. She kept one hand under her belly and the other pressed against the side of her cage, not because she needed support from fear, but because

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   No Fathers, No Problem

    Vera’s mouth pulled slightly, but it was not a smile. The original host had actually planned the whole thing, at least part of it, and Vera knew that. She had gone through the memories of the book enough to understand the desperation, the stupid plan, the sister who should have been in that room in

  • Reborn, Pregnant, and Plotting   No Lawyer, No Problem

    “Silence.”The judge’s voice cracked through the courtroom, and the room that had been drowning in chaos finally quieted down. The screens above the walls still flashed with live comments, public votes, and case summaries, but the actual room went still enough for every breath to sound too loud. Th

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